| Mentor Cana on Sat, 10 Apr 1999 09:11:43 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> [kcc-news] HRW: Kosovo Flash #24: KOSOVO REFUGEES "NIGHTS OF FEAR" |
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Human Rights Watch
KOSOVO HUMAN RIGHTS FLASH #24
April 8, 1999
KOSOVO REFUGEES DESCRIBE "NIGHTS OF FEAR" IN BELANICE VILLAGE
Refugees fleeing into northern Albania described an atmosphere of
utter terror in the Kosovo village of Belanice, which was used by
Yugoslav forces as a gathering point for ethnic Albanians living in
the Malishevo district. Dozens of witnesses interviewed by Human
Rights Watch reported that they were robbed, threatened with death,
suffered physical deprivation, and that refugees were occasionally
murdered. On April 1, their ordeal in Belanice came to an abrupt end,
when they were forcibly expelled from the village toward the Albanian
border.
According to refugees, Serbian police and Yugoslav Army soldiers
forced some 50,000 villagers in the Malishevo and Suva Reka region of
south-west Kosovo to gather in Belanice village beginning on or about
March 26. The Yugoslav authorities forced the dispersed rural
inhabitants into Belanice by shelling their homes or sending raiding
parties into their villages. Villagers were instructed by the
authorities to flee towards Belanice, one of the few villages in the
area that had not been shelled.
After spending several days and nights in the central square of
Belanice village, the authorities drove the bulk of the refugees
southwards towards the Albanian border, telling them that they were no
longer welcome in Kosovo. After traveling in a slow-moving refugee
column for up to three days, many of the Belanice survivors reached
Kukes, a northern Albanian border down, on or about April 4, where
they were interviewed by a representative from Human Rights Watch.
Refugees -- the bulk of whom were women, children and older men --
said they were forced to gather in the Belanice central square, where
they were surrounded by Yugoslav security forces who repeatedly and
persistently ordered them to hand over their money. Several
witnesses recalled that Qemal Bytyci, a bus driver from the village of
Semetisht, was repeatedly ordered by Yugoslav soldiers to search his
passengers for money, which he then turned over the to the surrounding
troops. The bus was parked in Belanice's central square for several
days along with hundreds of tractors and cars brought by the refugees.
"After they had forced him to search the passengers on three separate
occasions," recalled eighteen-year-old Shukrie Bytyci, "he could no
longer find any money in the bus. So they took him away and beat him
so badly that you could see the marks all over." Despairing of saving
his vehicle, the bus driver abandoned the bus to the police, who then
"drove all around the village, singing and shouting that they had
captured the bus," the witness recalled.
Other witnesses said that soldiers repeatedly and persistently
threatened them with death if they refused to hand over their money.
"The nights were full of terror," one elderly woman recalled, "with
the Serbs roaming around the square shooting in the air and pulling
out their knives to threaten you with death if you didn't pay. We gave
them everything, even the earrings in our ears and the rings off our
fingers." In many cases, refugees were beaten and cut with knives if
they refused to comply with demands for money.
On occasion, the Serb forces also killed refugees in Belanice. On
April 1, for example, all refugees gathered in the town were ordered
to leave for Albania. Batisha Hoxha, seventy-two years old, told
Human Rights Watch that her husband, seventy-five-year old Izet Hoxha,
was shot dead on the afternoon of April 1 after failing to join the
mass flight. "He tried at first to leave when they ordered us to clear
out," she recalled, "but he then said he was too old and tired to
leave." After returning home, the elderly couple was attacked by four
security force personnel who broke in through the front door. "My
husband couldn't see who they were at first," Mrs. Hoxha recalled,
"and offered them cigarettes. One of the soldiers knocked the pack
from his hand, and then shot him twice. The first bullet hit him in
the arm; the second hit him in the chest and killed him." Batisha
Hoxha was then ordered to join the other refugees in the central
square, who were making preparations to leave for Albania.
Dozens of witnesses who arrived in the northern Albanian town of Kukes
after traveling from Malishevo district to Albania through Rahovec,
Suva Reka, and Prizren said that most of the villages and towns in
south-western Kosovo had been burned down and are empty of ethnic
Albanian inhabitants. "Everywhere you go, you only see burnt homes and
Serbian police or army," one refugee said. "All of Kosovo is empty of
its people."
For further information contact:
Fred Abrahams: 1-917-293-3090
Holly Cartner (New York): 1-212-216-1277
Jean-Paul Marthoz (Brussels): 322-736-7838
***For further information about violations of human rights and
humanitarian law in Kosovo, see the Human Rights Watch website at
www.hrw.org on the "Crisis in Kosovo" page. To subscribe to Kosovo
Human Rights Flashes, send an E-mail to Donalds@hrw.org.***
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